With his victory at the 2026 Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix and his team-mate’s fourth-place finish, Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli became the new championship leader. In the process, he earned the record as the youngest driver ever to top the F1 championship.
Antonelli’s achievement is even more remarkable when you remember he is the first driver to lead the championship at under 20 years old – and in fact the first to do so before turning 22.
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Usually, drivers reach the top of the standings years later than the young Italian. Among the youngest, five drivers first led the championship at age 23, three at 24, five at 25, and seven at 26.
Before Antonelli, the record was held by Lewis Hamilton, who became championship leader at the 2007 Spanish Grand Prix in just his fourth race and debut season in the category – before even winning a grand prix.
Hamilton broke a record that had stood for nearly 50 years, since McLaren founder Bruce McLaren led the 1960 F1 world championship after winning the opening race of the season in Argentina. McLaren would go on to take three more victories, but only managed to finish runner-up in the drivers’ championship.
With Antonelli’s achievement, an interesting case drops off the podium of youngest leaders: Sebastian Vettel, who first led a championship on the day he won his first title, at the 2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – the start of his run of four consecutive championships.
The youngest drivers in F1 history to lead the championship
Driver
Age at the time of achieving the podium
Race
1
Kimi Antonelli
19 years, 7 months, and 4 days
2026 Japanese Grand Prix
2
Lewis Hamilton
22 years, 4 months, and 6 days
2007 Spanish Grand Prix
3
Bruce McLaren
22 years, 5 months, and 8 days
1960 Argentine Grand Prix
4
Sebastian Vettel
23 years, 4 months, and 11 days
2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
5
Kimi Raikkonen
23 years, 5 months, and 6 days
2003 Malaysian Grand Prix
6
Robert Kubica
23 years, 6 months, and 1 day
2008 Canadian Grand Prix
7
Fernando Alonso
23 years, 7 months, and 20 days
2005 Malaysian Grand Prix
8
Max Verstappen
23 years, 7 months, and 23 days
2021 Monaco Grand Prix
9
Oscar Piastri
24 years and 14 days
2025 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix
10
Charles Leclerc
24 years, 5 months, and 4 days
2022 Bahrain Grand Prix
11
Peter Collins
24 years, 7 months, and 25 days
1956 French Grand Prix
12
Michael Schumacher
25 years, 2 months, and 24 days
1994 Brazilian Grand Prix
13
Lando Norris
25 years, 4 months, and 3 days
2025 Australian Grand Prix
14
Niki Lauda
25 years, 4 months, and 15 days
1974 French Grand Prix
15
Emerson Fittipaldi
25 years, 5 months, and 2 days
1972 Monaco Grand Prix
16
David Coulthard
25 years, 11 months, and 10 days
1997 Australian Grand Prix
17
Jacques Villeneuve
26 years and 4 days
1997 Argentine Grand Prix
18
Ayrton Senna
26 years and 23 days
1986 Spanish Grand Prix
19
Stirling Moss
26 years, 8 months, and 17 days
1956 Belgian Grand Prix
20
Alain Prost
26 years, 10 months, and 30 days
1982 South African Grand Prix
Interestingly, Fernando Alonso and Max Verstappen first led the championship at almost exactly the same age, with just three days’ difference in favour of the Spaniard, who took the lead of the 2025 championship in the second race of that season – the year he would go on to win his first title.
As for Verstappen, although he won his first race in 2016, he didn’t lead the championship until mid-2021, when he would later secure his first title.
Other great champions like Michael Schumacher did not lead the championship until age 25, while rivals Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost first led it at 26 – the Brazilian two years before his first title, and the Frenchman three years before his.
Among other champions not listed, Jim Clark and Nelson Piquet first led at 27; Jochen Rindt, James Hunt, and Jenson Button at 28; and Mike Hawthorn and Mika Hakkinen at 29. The rest of the champions first led the standings after turning 30.
If you’re wondering, only 66 drivers in Formula 1 history have ever led the drivers’ championship. And for the record, the oldest first-time championship leaders were five-time champion Juan Manuel Fangio, at 38 years and 10 months, and the sport’s first-ever champion, Giuseppe Farina, who first led – and won his title – at 43 years old.
Photos from Japanese GP – Sunday

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos

Japanese GP – Sunday, in photos
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